Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t need a therapist. You are going to help her process this firmly and lovingly.
She needs you to be strong, confident, and to set loving limits. You can’t let the medical trauma you both endured impact your decisions.
Tell her nursing is for babies and she is a big girl. Give her a deadline in about a week - with a physical paper calendar to mark off the days as you count down.
Then on D-Day, offer a favorite treat or a plan snuggle instead. Stay upbeat yet empathetic and do not waver or give in. Treat like any time she asks for something she cant have (another cookie, a toy at Target, whatever). If she cries, hold her if she lets you. It will be hard and then it will be over.
If it’s hard for more than a week, go away for a few days. When you come back there won’t be any milk, and she will have a new routine with just Daddy and will forget about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BAND AIDS. I don’t know why this isn’t the prevailing advice. It is SO easy. I put band aids on my nipples and when dc asked to nurse I’d show them my “boo boo” and offered a snuggle instead. It worked brilliantly. Minimal tears, no rejection, all love. I weaned three extended nursers this way!
Actually brilliant
Anonymous wrote:“Now that you are 4 there is no more nursinf time”
It’s not that hard. But, he will have to be prepared for tantrums. She’s four plenty old enough to understand.
Anonymous wrote:You are getting a lot of reasonable responses on this thread that will help you, but honestly, it is a form of sexual abuse to invite a child who can also happily make a sandwich or ride a two-wheeler, to open your shirt and suck on your breast.
It's not beautiful anymore, it's ick.
Anonymous wrote:BAND AIDS. I don’t know why this isn’t the prevailing advice. It is SO easy. I put band aids on my nipples and when dc asked to nurse I’d show them my “boo boo” and offered a snuggle instead. It worked brilliantly. Minimal tears, no rejection, all love. I weaned three extended nursers this way!
Anonymous wrote:You are getting a lot of reasonable responses on this thread that will help you, but honestly, it is a form of sexual abuse to invite a child who can also happily make a sandwich or ride a two-wheeler, to open your shirt and suck on your breast.
It's not beautiful anymore, it's ick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t need a therapist. You are going to help her process this firmly and lovingly.
She needs you to be strong, confident, and to set loving limits. You can’t let the medical trauma you both endured impact your decisions.
Tell her nursing is for babies and she is a big girl. Give her a deadline in about a week - with a physical paper calendar to mark off the days as you count down.
Then on D-Day, offer a favorite treat or a plan snuggle instead. Stay upbeat yet empathetic and do not waver or give in. Treat like any time she asks for something she cant have (another cookie, a toy at Target, whatever). If she cries, hold her if she lets you. It will be hard and then it will be over.
If it’s hard for more than a week, go away for a few days. When you come back there won’t be any milk, and she will have a new routine with just Daddy and will forget about it.
A 4 year old will slip a hand in and start undoing a bra. Then it turns into a physical power struggle.
DAD needs to hold her.
Anonymous wrote:Get some books about weaning. Make 4 year old the absolute cut off so she knows it's coming. Start cutting back to where it's just once every other day and even less before the date comes and it won't be so hard. Give prizes every day she goes without. It's hard, but I know you both can do this. I weaned my kiddo completely at 3.5 and this is what we did. 4 is a big birthday so you can definitely talk about the big kid stuff ahead and get a great present for being all done with breast feeding. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:As a mom who was exhausted still night feeding a 2.5 year old who is restricted eater, while struggling with anemia I sympathize. I think the best thing for you both is for you to find a trusted caregiver (spouse, grandparent, night nurse) and go away for three days. The truth is you need healing probably even more than she does and she needs a fresh start with someone who doesn’t share the trauma bond. I did it and it worked for us. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:My nephew was 2, but he was a bit tantrummy about weaning so what they did was my brother (who does remote IT work) took him to stay with my parents for a couple weeks.
Anonymous wrote:You are getting a lot of reasonable responses on this thread that will help you, but honestly, it is a form of sexual abuse to invite a child who can also happily make a sandwich or ride a two-wheeler, to open your shirt and suck on your breast.
It's not beautiful anymore, it's ick.
Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t need a therapist. You are going to help her process this firmly and lovingly.
She needs you to be strong, confident, and to set loving limits. You can’t let the medical trauma you both endured impact your decisions.
Tell her nursing is for babies and she is a big girl. Give her a deadline in about a week - with a physical paper calendar to mark off the days as you count down.
Then on D-Day, offer a favorite treat or a plan snuggle instead. Stay upbeat yet empathetic and do not waver or give in. Treat like any time she asks for something she cant have (another cookie, a toy at Target, whatever). If she cries, hold her if she lets you. It will be hard and then it will be over.
If it’s hard for more than a week, go away for a few days. When you come back there won’t be any milk, and she will have a new routine with just Daddy and will forget about it.